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e_hutchinson_gorilla_cincinnati_blackThere is a joke that made the rounds sometime ago about this fellow who woke up one morning and discovered that a gorilla was on his roof. It is arguably in sufficiently good taste to bear repetition even in a Sunday family newspaper such as this.

So the fellow looks up the yellow pages and, sure enough, there’s an ad for “Gorilla Removers”. He calls the number, and the gorilla remover says, “I will be there in 30 minutes. The gorilla remover arrives and gets out of his van. He’s got with him a ladder, a baseball bat, a shotgun and a huge, ferocious looking dog of uncertain progeny.

“What are you going to do?” the homeowner asks.

“I’m going to put up this ladder against the roof, then I’m going to go up there and knock the gorilla off the roof with the bat. When the gorilla falls off, the dog is trained to grab the gorilla’s testicles and bite them. The gorilla will then be subdued enough for me to lock him in the cage in the back of the van”, says the gorilla remover, and hands the fellow the shotgun.

“What do I need the shotgun for?” asks the homeowner.

The gorilla remover replies, “If the gorilla should knock ME off the roof, you must immediately shoot the dog.”

There was no need for a gorilla remover on May 29 this year at the Cincinnati Zoo when a three-year-old child fell into the enclosure housing Harambe, an imposing 17-year-old silverback gorilla. Rather, the call would have been for a child remover. In these days of the new journalism, where every incident becomes immediate fair game for social media communication, a video of the event went viral.

The outcome was the shooting of the gorilla by the zoo authorities in order to protect the boy from possibly being mauled to death by the gorilla who, it was claimed, could crush a coconut with his bare hands.

One aftermath of this outcome is that this ostensibly sensible decision proved not to be the popular one, as some of those who had no problem with this majestic animal being held in captivity for populist entertainment, nevertheless wondered about the lack of value placed upon its life in the incident.

Some argued that the child was in no clear and imminent danger, given similar previous incidents between gorillas and small children and the almost maternal treatment ostensibly displayed by Harambe towards the child here on some occasions during the episode.

This, alas, is a non-starter. The gorilla is classified in law as an animal “ferae naturae” (wild by nature), a categorization that makes the owner strictly liable for any harm that it causes, whether the animal has previously exhibited such a propensity or not. I am not aware that the law in Cincinnati differs from this. Thus, circuses and zoos are liable if one of their wild animals should be the cause of injury to an individual. We may surmise therefore that the zoo authorities may have acted out of a sense of avoiding possible liability to the parents of the child and the consequential negative reputational damage to the establishment as much as out of a desire to avoid the nightmare scenario of such a frightfully strong animal rending an infant from limb to limb in full view of horrified onlookers.

Indeed, those moments when the animal suddenly dragged the child through the water by his feet were far from tender and drew an audible collective gasp from the spectators. This merely served to demonstrate further the unpredictability of an animal of this classification and, hence, that too of a probable happy outcome to the entire affair.

Confronted with the argument that it was a straight contest for the primacy of a life between that of a human and that of a magnificent specimen from an allegedly endangered species, those against the destruction of the gorilla naturally turned their attention to the mother and her “negligent” supervision of the child. Last Friday morning, I watched an intriguing discussion on CNN between two female lawyers who held contrasting points of view on this matter.

Over the years, I have had consciously to warn first-year students of the law of negligence that liability for harm should not be presumed as established simply because there is the existence of harm to an individual. The victim must still establish that the elements of the tort are severally satisfied in order for there to be liability. One of the discussants appeared to have committed this elementary error, being prepared to attribute culpability to the mother simply because the child fell into the enclosure. She would not be swayed from this view by the fact that the mother was also simultaneously attending to her other children and sought to confirm her assertion by relating the fact that such an incident had not occurred in 38 years, assumedly the period for which the zoo had been in existence.

It is clear that if the mother is to be held civilly liable at all for anything. It would have to be to the zoo for causing the death of its gorilla through a failure properly to control the wanderings of her son. This determination is likely to involve complex issues such as whether the “chain of causation” between the mother’s negligence of not keeping a proper lookout and the death of Harambe remained unbroken despite the zoo’s meditated decision to shoot the gorilla, or whether this action on the zoo’s part was constrained by the consequence of the mother’s inadvertence in the first place, leaving the zoo without a free choice in the matter.

Criminal liability of the mother, on the other hand, would be based on some statutory provision to that effect, but this should also require that the mother acted without due care and attention for the safety of the child. I have not discovered such legislation in Cincinnati, but that in Tasmania is apposite. The Children, Young Persons and their Families Act 1997, provides, by section 91:-

(1) A person who has a duty of care in respect of a child must not intentionally take, or fail to take, action that could reasonably be expected to result in –

(a) the child suffering significant harm as a result of physical injury or sexual abuse; or

(b) the child suffering emotional or psychological harm of such a kind that the child’s emotional or intellectual development is, or is likely to be, significantly damaged; or

(c) the child’s physical development or health being significantly harmed.

Penalty:

Fine not exceeding 50 penalty units or imprisonment for a term not exceeding 2 years, or both.

      (2) Proceedings for an offence under subsection (1) may only be brought after consultation with the Secretary.

      (3) A person may be guilty of an offence under subsection (1) even though the child was protected from harm by the action of another person.


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205 responses to “The Jefferson Cumberbatch Column – “The Gorilla and the Boy””


  1. The racist US Wasps did not support the elimination of Harambe out of their dislike for blacks.The child’s mother and father are black,so,ipso facto,Harambe should not have been sacrificed.If Donald Trump had his way the mother and father would have been eliminated.



  2. @ Jeff, this is a strange article to write at this time. Were you in Barbados for the past week? Did you read the news on BU or the traditional media? Is this a part of the deflection? With so much going on and you chose to write about something that has no effect on Barbados?


  3. Clearly the child was in danger of being “accidentally” slammed into a wall by the 450 pound gorilla.

    The Zoo failed to make the enclosure safe. No child should be able to enter that enclosure.

    The life of an animal is not as valuable as the life of a child.


  4. @Hants

    From the volume of chatter generated from this incident one could not help but feel the racial overtones to the reaction of the killing of the gorilla. It appears the father was not present at the zoo yet he was vilified on social media for his lack of parenting skills. The story serves as a reminder that we have a lot of work to do to promote racial harmony in the world. It was unfortunate the animal had to be killed but after evaluating what this gorilla was capable was weighed it would have taken a split second to make the right decision – Kill the beast.

  5. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    Lol…spot on Gabriel….and not Trump alone. The gorilla should not havee been harmed, she did not look like she was harming that child and as a female, would protect yhe kid.. I keep asking, how did such a small child get away from the parents, no one is answering me, I have visited many of those zoos and they are warning signs abiut the distance to keep, particularly in the safari villages, where there are no enclosures….besudes, these greedy people need to stop exploiting animals out of Africa and everywhere else for monetary gain, they been doing it for centuries, they are still too greedy.

    And I find humans to be wilder than animals by nature….two legged wild beasts.


  6. This incident has me looking for a new TV set as it did not give me a true indication of the race/color of the child. I was extremely perplexed at the message coming from the media until I read of the race of the child and his parents.

    It is a great country, but yet there is a large racist vein running through the body. I often wonder what the USA could be, if it could rid itself of some of its racism.

    In a matter of seconds this gorilla would have been able to kill this frail youngster. I agree with putting it down.

    Imagine if it was your child in the pen


  7. Jeff, you had better give the folks here (who paid you) their money back. Didn’t you know that when they paid you, you lost your freedom of expression. You better read that contract and see the list of topics you are allowed to post on.

  8. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    Were their dart guns for tranquilizing animals not working that day.

  9. Jeff Cumberbatch Avatar
    Jeff Cumberbatch

    Heather, I am a columnist not a paid or unpaid hack!. I do not write what others want me to write but rather on what I want to write. Further, my world is not confined to Barbados and my intellect, or what little there is of it, is not stirred by petty partisan politics, if that is what you are referring to.

    Today is Sunday, after all…you have a virtual smorgasbord of columns to choose from in both newspapers and on BU. If I am not to your taste today, just carry on smartly to the next item.

    Incidentally, the legal issues involved in this incident provide much of the income I earn to support my family.

  10. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    So knowing how capitalist think, the mother would have filed a lawsuit, despite the shared negligence and it was easier to kill the animal…..not one cent…lol

  11. Jeff Cumberbatch Avatar
    Jeff Cumberbatch

    Thanks, Gazer, but as long as the blogmeister thinks it worthy of publication, that is the only “peers review” I need here.


  12. The fearlessness of Children is extraordinary…if that had been an adult they would, most probably, had fainted. I wish I could get the boy’s story of his ten minutes with the Beast


  13. Personally i hate the idea of animals being chained or locked away and not allowed to lived in their natural habitat as nature had designed
    However that being what it is and man insatiable taste to control and dominate these things of unfortunate occurrences would continue to occur
    The question/s as to liability then should be address to those who consciously set out to imposed their way of thinking on an animal into a life of mind changing alternatives with an expectation that the animal would naturally conform and adapt to a new environment that the animal is not accustomed or in its earlier or formative years was not prepared for
    This incident and previous incidents should tell those who believe that imprisonment of animals is wrong and that animals like humans can react at the spur of any given moment if felt challenged or disturb no matter or well trained or seemingly adaptable the animal behaves in a different habitat
    It is time that human respect the rights of animals letting them be free to roam within their habitat and environment that nature had first created for them
    Killing the animal is not the answer as such incidents would occur again but restoring a sense of dignity and those right to the animal which requires them a place of abode outside the glare of eyeballs and capitalist entertainment

  14. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @Well Well & Consequences June 5, 2016 at 8:07 AM #
    “….these greedy people need to stop exploiting animals out of Africa and everywhere else for monetary gain, they been doing it for centuries, they are still too greedy.”

    Zoos all over the world should be closed. Zoos are nothing more than places to enslave animals for human vile amusement and profit for the operators; just like plantations were used to enslave Africans for economic profit and sexual exploitation.

    If people want to see ‘wild animals’ then they should go into the animals’ natural habitat and observe. Why keep them on some reservation for humans to engage in visual kicks to stimulate their false sense of family genes ‘superiority’ over their hairy cousins.


  15. This post is another example of the irrelevance of Jeff’s legal training and analysis. As several people have noted, the public doesn’t care about the legal issues in this case. The right wing crowd are outraged because they see this as a case of low-IQ parents making a costly nuisance of themselves with their worthless child. The white man’s burden.
    The only reason I want to chime in is to disagree with those who tie this incident to the Trump phenomenon. It is true Trump may share the irritation of those who seem more annoyed with than concerned about the child. But it is at least as likely that Hillary has the same attitude. Not in public, of course. But this is a woman who was a Goldwater Republican during the heyday of the US civil rights movement, when Martin Luther King was alive. She has no black friends, only black flunkies and servants. When Obama asked her to serve as his Secretary of State, the most senior Cabinet position in the Executive Branch of the US federal government, she told him she’d consider it, and took her time before announcing her acceptance in a way that put him in his place by making it seem she was doing him a favour to take the job.
    This is a woman who failed her bar exam after graduating from law school and has never accomplished anything of significance apart from securing appointments to several top jobs.


  16. @chad99999

    In a nutshell what you are saying is that Bajans should be happy navel gazing.


  17. @ Jeff,

    My layman’s opinion is that the Zoo was negligent in having an enclosure that allowed a child to enter and subsequently the child was abused, traumatised and its life endangered by the gorilla.

    They are many legal issues with this incident that are worthy of discussion.

    What constitutes negligence on the part of the mother in this case ?


  18. @Chad100k – 1
    Some of us are not as fast as others. So I am stuck at the very first line with ” irrelevance of Jeff’s legal training and analysis”. Please elucidat, as I cannot figure out what you mean. Barbados does not need people with legal training?

    And whilst you are at it, please convince me why your anti- Hilary rant is more relevant.

    Forgive my slowness today.


  19. *elucidata, elucidato, or elucidate; choose what you think is relevant.


  20. @ Jeff, crictisms evoke the worst of you. Where is your legal training now? For your information nether am I neither a paid or unpaid hack.


  21. @Hants

    The video BU embedded in Jeff’s article brings out the information the Zoo was ‘audited’ some time before and found wanting as far as adequate enclosure/parameter fence t protect visitors to the Zoo.

  22. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ Hants June 5, 2016 at 10:28 AM #
    “My layman’s opinion is that the Zoo was negligent in having an enclosure that allowed a child to enter and subsequently the child was abused, traumatised and its life endangered by the gorilla.”

    Both the parents and the Zoo were negligent. But where is the evidence to show actual injury and abuse inflicted by the gorilla?

    Who says the gorilla was not playing with the child in his (the gorilla) own ‘beastly’ way?

    Should we not ask Dame Jane Goodall and Sir David Attenborough their take on the gorilla’s behavior before jumping to conclusions about the gorilla’s reaction to the little boy’s incursion into the ‘pen’?


  23. Was it TheGazer who made the point in an earlier comment that at some point (BU says all like now) Barbadians (BU commenters) need to identify common points of interest with the goal to make this country great again. There is enough evidence elsewhere (Guyana,Jamaica) to illustrate what political colour affiliation does to a country. In fact this is a non starter for a country like Barbados having made a huge investment in education.


  24. @Miller

    Yours is a ridiculous last comment.


  25. @Jeff
    You’ve managed to weave this unfortunate incident into your professional specialty and training, ignore the naysayers they are busy removing lint from their belly button.

    To the famous quote containing the words “you can please all of the people some of the time” I would add that you can never please some people at any time.


  26. “weave the strands”


  27. “The Gorilla and the Boy” could be an allegory?


  28. Distraction, distraction! High, bright Sunday morning Jeff brought a red herring disguised as a black gorilla.


  29. Heather, Jeff has written on a myriad of topics in his column, his articles are scholarly and provoke thought. Some prefer we deal only with politics? The robustness of our laws are important to provoke Barbadians to think think think. It is a role many have abdicated or refuse to fill. Let us thank Jeff for stepping down from the Hill to interact with regular folk. It is no secret BU has a healthy interest in the world Jeff operates. Let us engage constructively.

  30. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    @Jeff, you started your piece in such a rollicking manner. So my only regret was that you ended so quietly with the legal points!

    Years ago I used to enjoy the legal drama PaperChase, so frankly anything you offer on legal issues has my attention. That’s a bias I imagine. Oh lawd.

    @Chad45, as a poster you are absolutely confounding. You lambaste a legal professor for ‘elucidating’ on the law. On the professional level you have spoken on business matters but I assume yours were relevant to the point you made!

    How absurd are you to dispute as irrelevant an exposition of public law. Particularly the type of legal issues surrounding a subject that could impact any parent at any public event anywhere.

    Cha!


  31. @ David wow! Did you read his 8:29 am post?

  32. Jeff Cumberbatch Avatar
    Jeff Cumberbatch

    Chad, one short of 100,000,

    On something that is irrelevant, you seem to have a lot to say! Incidentally, have you ever sat, let alone failed, a Bar Exam? He that is without sin…


  33. @Heather

    We have all read the article but more importantly we all are edified by Jeff’s body of work. Instead of engaging in constructive debate we trivialize? Again the BU household as all commenters to see how they can add value to the online discussion of which BU is a part.

  34. Jeff Cumberbatch Avatar
    Jeff Cumberbatch

    Hans, your point @10:28am is taken, although negligence,now being considered to be the unreasonable taking of a foreseeable risk, I would suppose that the passage of 38 years without incident concerning the present arrangements would tend to have this occasion classified as an “inevitable accident” rather than “negligent conduct” on the Zoo’s part. Interesting thesis!

  35. Jeff Cumberbatch Avatar
    Jeff Cumberbatch

    You may neither be paid or unpaid, Heather, but your contributions are most certainly not balanced. I do not mind criticism at all since the world I inhabit professionally is inherently adversarial, but you need to get s grip. The world does not revolve around your political inclination!

  36. Jeff Cumberbatch Avatar
    Jeff Cumberbatch

    Hanis, as to your second question, the argument is that the mother acted unreasonably in not keeping a proper lookout for her son in a public place, thus allowing him to be placed in the grave danger he was placed in. I remember reading somewhere, though, that if you were to place a young boy in cotton wool, he would still manage to hurt himself. I do not think that she was at fault here!

  37. Jeff Cumberbatch Avatar
    Jeff Cumberbatch

    *Hants


  38. @Heather, I must say that I concur with your view on the irrelevancy of this scholarly article at this time. To those who disagree with you and suggest that there is a need for us to discuss matters other than politics is suggestive of a group of refugees adrift in a boat deciding that a scolarly discussion on the stars and the cosmos would be a useful exercise to keep the mind occupied. Barbados does not have the luxuary of esoteric discussion at this time while the ship is sinking. Let our energies be expended in attempts at saving the sinking ship and its passengers (not the crew) and then if it can be returned on course, we can all sit on deck and discuss the wonders of the world.


  39. @Fearplay

    You cannot legislate what people should talk or write about, we are not living in a police state. Check BU’s FrontPage and pick a topic to satisfy your interest.


  40. JC

    Good article.

    What of the actual or potential liability of the gorilla catchers, the zoo as principal, shooting the animal. Maybe their ‘balls’ might still be in a legal sling. LOL

    Even in circumstances where no physical harm was done, did that not expose the child to possible harm, even psychological, equivalent to what the gorilla might have done?

    But our friend, the gorilla, has paid the ultimate price for what the law should come to see as matters out of his conscientiousness.


  41. My gut reaction to this incident was what kind of mother lets a child out of their sight at a zoo for a few seconds, then it shifted to what kind of zoo would have an enclosure that allowed aa child to gain access to the animals. I thought that they were equally culpable but those of us who have children know that all it takes is a few seconds before a child pushes a scissors into an electrical outlet or makes some kind of life altering decision that is all too common.

    Then social media took over and it was mostly to denigrate the child rearing skills of the mother and a supposedly “absent” father and demand that charges be brought against the mother. Was some of it racists? I’m sure but then I thought of the public’s reaction when “Cecil” the Lion was shot in Zimbabwe and the reaction then against the principal involved.

    One would hope that social media would also condemn those parents whose young children get hold of guns and harm themselves, their siblings and even the parents the news is chock a block with those stories but social media is mostly silent.

    The shooting of the Gorilla was unfortunate but I equate it with an armed individual holding another person as a hostage and no one can determine what will happen so the threat is removed.

  42. Jeff Cumberbatch Avatar
    Jeff Cumberbatch

    And we wonder why the members of the “political class” behave the way they do? It All some ever want to talk about is their personalities, and not the alarming identity of their views own most matters. Some, for their own ends, want the unthinking hordes to perceive a fundamental difference between two close letters in the alphabet.

    I suppose the time draws nigh for another battle between TWEEDLEDUM and TWEEDLEDEE…

    Some have no lives outside a PARTISAN electoral campaign, it seems.

  43. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    @Heather, clearly @Jeff’s opinions matter to you profoundly. Either that or you are perturbed that a man of his standing gave you a grade C- or thereabouts on one of your key essays here on BU.

    Whatever the genesis, your broadsides re his choice of material lack true merit.

    As he said “…you have a virtual smorgasbord of columns to choose from in both newspapers and on BU. ” and he could have added, or any of the myriad Bajan Facebook & other blogs.

    So your being over wrought about HIS views are an interesting sub-plot.

    Incidentally, do you see how many posts are now to you or about you? Imagine if you had inserted a serious comment on Stuart or one of you other burning concerns in this blog; thus off we would have gone similarly attuned to those remarks rather than chasing this non-point sub-plot of yours!

    Embrace the power of blogging rather than this linear construct of berating one person’s opinion. That is so 20th century! Opinions are a dime a blog these days.

    But to your disquiet, VALUABLE opinions are still worth their pixel space… so more power to the value you attribute to Mr. Cumberbatch! LOLL


  44. David
    I read Miller’s last comment as written tongue in cheek.
    Chad
    Hilary had just been beaten for the nomination of the Party by a brilliant but unlikely candidate who went on to win the top prize,the Presidency of the USA.She would have been entertaining doubts of her future in politics and would need time to sort herself out. Besides,there were those who thought she would have made a good VP!
    WW&C
    The experts thought that darts would have had too long a time lag to take effect and would have put the child in further danger.
    There was no choice in this situation.Healthy boy children are very inquisitive.Dont underestimate the extent to which their curiosity leads them into dangerous pursuits.Its part of their DNA.

  45. Jeff Cumberbatch Avatar
    Jeff Cumberbatch

    Thanks, Pachamama. I think that there would scarcely be any liability for the Zoo since the gorilla was its property. It was not shot in the wild!

    Of course the boy would have been traumatized by the eventual outcome, but it could have been much worse for him, don’t you think?.


  46. Some of us can walk, chew gum and dribble a basketball simultaneously.


  47. ” In Cincinnati, the 4-year-old boy who fell into the gorilla enclosure did so after climbing the 3-foot-tall barrier surrounding it, then pushing through some bushes before dropping into the gorilla habitat.”

    If the above is true, it is surprising no one else did this before. 3 feet is less than a metre.


  48. @Jeff
    Thanks, Pachamama. I think that there would scarcely be any liability for the Zoo since the gorilla was its property. It was not shot in the wild
    +++++++++
    ‘Its property”? There is a school of thought that animals are sentient beings and not the property of anyone, keeping an animal in captivity does not make it your property to do as you wish. This incident will further escalate the discussion on the role of Zoos in society.

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